The Rev Charlie Cleverly, Rector of St Aldate’s Church, said that the call to prayer could drive people away from areas adjacent to the Oxford Central mosque, which hopes to bring in the three-daily azan.

He said: “I feel [the call to prayer] is un-English and very different from a bell.

“It may force people to move out and encourage Muslim families to move in. “I hope and pray the imam will hear the strength of feeling gently and lovingly and change his mind.”

There seems to be two different forces at work here: fierce political correctness which cares not about the inexorable islamisation of the UK and honest admission that little steps like a call to pray actually do count ultimately and will have longer term effects.
The likes of the Bishop of Oxford can endear himself to today’s Muslims in the certain knowledge that he won’t have to live with the consequences in fifty years time.

The consequences of encouraging the civil authorities to silence a Muslim call to prayer will almost certainly be to silence Christian calls to prayer. England would be a much poorer place without bell-ringing. Read Dorothy Sayer’s The Nine Tailors for what you could be condemning.

“Speaking to The Church of England Newspaper earlier this month, the Bishop said he did not oppose in principle the introduction of the call to prayer, but called for reciprocity to be shown to Christians in Islamic countries”

# 2: melodious bells at 9 am on Sunday morning are not the same thing as a nasal voice intoning Arabic through a loudspeaker at 5 am, noon, and 6 pm on a Monday. But you may be right in your underlying assumption, that Britain can no longer hold on to its ancient Christian tradition. We can expect an Anglican cleric (o trahison des clercs!) to put paid to that.

#5. melodious bells at 9am!!!! You have obviously never heard the cacophony known as change ringing! It is unending and unendurable. When the bells of St. Martin’s were finally installed in the ‘infamous’ bell tower in Perth. They were muffled due to the complaints, and this is in Australia where wingeing is frowned upon.
Jon R

Greetings from the Middle East. I write this as I listen right now to a very angry imam (they always sound angry) giving the Friday sermon over loudspeakers here in my city of residence.
Is that coming next? I can gaurantee you that the priest is right in that people will leave the area because hearing thrice-daily, “There is no god but Allah and Muhammad is his meeenger” in Arabic is not really a great experience for Christians. I mean at the heart of this message is that Jesus was not crucified and he is not the Son of God.
Thrice daily hearing the announcement that your whole religion is bunk is not an occasion of generosity or kindness.
And this is only the beginning, later will be the other two calls to prayer, and then the Friday sermons, which last a long time.

#6: I did say ‘melodious’ - most bell ringing I find horrible. Abu Daoud has it right - the camel is putting more than its nose into the tent. If Muslims want to summon their co-religionists to prayer, they should use the phone.
Really, things are getting absurd in Englandistan, where school books about the 3 little pigs (& what could be more English than that?) are being banned. You don’t hear Hindus there demanding open air cremations. Why is the English church so supine - or invertebrate?

There was one city in Western MI that handled a situation along this blog subject line rather well. The local Isamic population insisted on voicing its message 5 times a day with hi-power speakers. The city said no-way. The Islamics cried “discrimation” and pointed out that local churches bells rang out every Sunday and sometimes on other special days. The city in question quickly pointed out that the Islamics could pick any one day a week to “ring out’ for only one time of that day, the same conditiions followed by local chruches - take it or leave it. I believe the matter was dropped.